Armenia PM: Some types of activities will be fully allowed in country as of Monday

News.am, Armenia

14:23, 11.04.2020

YEREVAN. – Some types of activities will be fully allowed in Armenia as of Monday. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan announced about this live on Facebook.

He then noted the domains where the activities will be completely allowed in the country. “Agriculture, forestry, fishery, fishing, mining industry and operation of open-pit mines, electricity, [natural] gas, good-quality vapor air activity, water supply, waste management and recycling, sewerage, transportation and storage, financial and insurance activities, public administration, the protection and compulsory social security domain, the healthcare and social services domain, foreign organizations’ activities,” said Pashinyan. “We have also made a decision that we will fully allow outdoor construction activities, as well as the production of tobacco products, as of April 13.

And in the period after April 20, we will also open the production of clothes; we will try to [re]open the domain of textiles. We will allow the activities of shops; we will allow the scientific research and development domain to work.”

Art: Edman O’Aivazian: A tribute to the Armenian-Iranian artist and his phosphoric landscapes

The National, UAE
April 9 2020

The
artist who frequently painted members of the Saudi royal family died in March due to Covid-19 complications

Iranian-Armenian painter and architect Edman O’Aivazian died aged 89 late last month from coronavirus-related causes. Photo by Arin O’Aivazian

There is something almost chemical about Edman O’Aivazian’s landscapes.

The green colour of his hills have a phosphoric glow to them, and the sky that hangs over his mountains are lit fluorescent blue.

The paintings border on the abstract, with a few hand-picked details grounding them as natural scenes – a couple of crisp blades of grass, a lone house on a hill, or a particularly detailed face of a mountain.

You would be hard-pressed to find the original inspiration for these landscapes. They could be inspired by the mountains of Iran or the hills in the Armenian countryside, both countries that O’Aivazian had roots in.

The painter – who died aged 89 late last month from Covid19-related causes – left few clues about where the real-life locations of his landscapes were. Some of his work clearly indicates the scenery inspiration – such as the painting titled Gilan, named after the Iranian province – but most are cryptically named.

Perhaps because O’Aivazian knew that the landscapes of his homes could not be found anywhere other than in memory, after years of travelling and living abroad. But, this is merely conjecture.

One basis for my reasoning is that O’Aivazian’s marine paintings have titles that clearly indicate their location. There are paintings that show the moored boats of Maldon, an English town on the Blackwater Estuary, or beach-goers in the shadow of a pier in Santa Monica, California.

These paintings touch upon realism much more than his phosphoric landscapes. The colours in them are nowhere near as fantastical. The scenes are presented in high detail, the figures in them, clear and crisp: the water shimmers with a photographic representation.

Last Light of The Day by Edman O’Aivazian. Courtesy: Garin O’Aivazian.

Maybe it is because O’Aivazian actually stood in front of these places as he painted, and had a scene to refer to.

There are a few pictures of him online that show him by the beach, standing behind an easel, brush in hand.

Maybe, for his landscapes rather than seascapes, he had to refer to memory, painting through the wistful lens of nostalgia.

O’Aivazian’s works can be found in museums around the world, including Armenia, England, Saudi Arabia and the Ukraine. His Thuluth and Kufic calligraphic designs have decorated the interiors of several mosques in Oman, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. He also designed the interiors of Armenian churches in Iran and Europe.

Little is publicly known about the man himself, beyond a biographical broad stroke.

He was born in Tehran in 1931 into an Armenian family, and began painting at the age of 13. As a young artist, he participated in group exhibitions and solo
shows that explored Iran’s vast country on canvas. He
travelled to Europe and, in 1971, moved to London via Rome, where he studied at the Academy of
Arts.

“In my formative years I studied Persian art at Isfahan, a cradle of Islamic art and design,” O’Aivazian wrote on his website. “I designed a 250-metre calligraphy frieze, which was installed in Riyadh Airport in 1985. More recently, I was commissioned to design a 50-metre mural for the King Abdulaziz National Museum, Riyadh.

Edman O’Aivazian / Sultan Qaboos Grande #Mosque, #Muscat, #Oman. 2001.

multitudinous Glass, Gold and Stone #Mosaics pic.twitter.com/hhJj2aPyBs — mayersche_hofkunst (@mayersof_munich) September 16, 2016

In 2002, O’Aivazian
joined the Wapping Group of Artists. The collective was founded in 1946 with the aim of recording the busy life of London’s arterial river. They met every Wednesday between April and September to paint the Thames and the land on either side of it.

On his website, O’Aivazian wrote he felt very much at home with the group and in “the company of like-minded painters, who are dedicated to recording the essence of the Thames and the human activity that this great river supports on its banks.”

An Iranian-Armenian oil painter, Edman O’Aivazian, passed away from coronavirus yesterday. I’m just sharing a few of his I really like.

He never wanted to sell his work.

We’re losing our best people.

So sad.#coronavirus #Armenia #Iran pic.twitter.com/2oH8RABAzw — Natasha Zimardi Berstein (@nmonego) March 26, 2020

O’Aivazian was not a fan of selling his artwork. He preferred his pieces to be hung in people’s homes as opposed to in the galleries of art collectors.

During the 2016 opening of one of his last exhibitions, Colours of the Homeland, at the Niavaran Cultural Centre in Tehran, he said: “Selling an artwork is like selling one’s own child. I am financially secure and therefore I prefer my works to be hung on the walls of houses. That way instead of having to dust my paintings, other people do the dusting.”

However, he believed that art exhibitions could help forge connections between an artist and their audience, saying they presented an opportunity for artists to learn from people in ways they could not if they were isolated.

“When you hold an exhibition, you can find your way to people’s hearts and there is no place where you can hide something there,” he said.

Besides his landscape and marine works, O’Aivazian was also a skilled portrait painter.

He frequently painted members of the Saudi royal family. One of his paintings of King Abdulaziz Al Saud shows the monarch sitting barefoot in his office with a child on his lap. The painting is perhaps the most intimate portrait of the founder of Saudi Arabia that I have ever seen, showing him more as a family man than a monarch.

A portrait of King Abdulaziz Al Saud

Admittedly, I did not know much about O’Aivazian before his death. A few years ago, I saw his portrait of Aram Khachaturian – who O’Aivazian met and painted in 1977 – while visiting the Armenian composer’s house-museum in Yerevan.

The portrait is
stunning, it faithfully captures
the Sabre Dance composer’s feverish conducting style with minute scratch-like lines. It shows
the conductor with his hands high up in the air, his ghostly hair slicked back and a subtle frown on his face that will make
you think someone in the orchestra was not playing on time, or was slightly out of tune.

That portrait of Khachaturian is the only one of O’Aivazian’s works I have so far seen in person.

Had the artist’s death not been announced by Iranian
media on March 25, I probably would not have scoured the web to find more information on him.

As stunning as O’Aivazian’s portrait work and marine paintings are, it is his brightly coloured landscapes that drew me to him most, and had me regretting that I had not stumbled on more of his works earlier.

Death is, perhaps, the greatest publicist.

Updated: April 9, 2020 07:44 PM

More of his paintings at

About 400 Armenian national return home from Moscow by two flights

TASS, Russia
April 8 2020
Upon arrival in Armenia, these people will be obliged to go into 14-day quarantine
© Tatyana Belyakova/TASS

TASS, April 8.  About 400 Armenian nationals have returned home from Russia by two flights chartered by the Armenian embassy, the Armenian embassy in Russia said on Tuesday.

“On April 6 and 7, Armenian nationals returned to Armenia by two flights,” the embassy wrote on its Facebook account.

According to the embassy, more than 150 Armenians who had been unable to buy tickets were taken home free of charge.

Upon arrival in Armenia, these people will be obliged to go into 14-day quarantine.

About 200 Armenian nationals, who failed to take these flights, have been accommodated at four hotels. Twenty opted to stay at the airport.

As a result of restrictive measures taken in most of world nations over the coronavirus pandemic, many people have problems with returning to their home countries.

In late December 2019, Chinese officials notified the World Health Organization (WHO) about the outbreak of a previously unknown pneumonia in the city of Wuhan, in central China. Since then, cases of the novel coronavirus – named COVID-19 by the WHO – have been reported in every corner of the globe, including Russia.

On March 11, 2020, the WHO declared the coronavirus outbreak a pandemic. According to the latest statistics, roughly 1,350,000 people have been infected worldwide and more than 74,000 deaths have been reported. That said, over 286,000 individuals have recovered from the illness across the globe.

CoE: There were major reductions in incarceration rates in Armenia

News.am, Armenia
April 7 2020

13:41, 07.04.2020

The Council of Europe has published new statistics on the European prisons, including Armenia.

The overall imprisonment rate – the number of inmates per 100,000 inhabitants- remained stable in Europe from 2018 to 2019, according to the Council of Europe Annual Penal Statistics for 2019.

On 31 January 2019, there were 1,540,484 inmates in the 50 prison administrations (out of 52) of the Council of Europe member states for which these data are available, which means that the overall imprisonment rate, an indicator mainly determined by the length of prison sentences, was 106 inmates per 100,000 inhabitants. In the 45 prison administrations that provided data for both 2018 and 2019 the global incarceration remained stable, with a very slight increase from 104 to 104.5 inmates per 100,000 inhabitants. The proportion of inmates not serving a final sentence also remained stable (22%).

According to the press release, there were major reductions in the incarceration rates in Armenia (-36%) and North Macedonia(-29%), followed by Iceland (-14%), Bosnia and Herzegovina (Republika Srpska) (-11%), Romania (-10%), Republic of Moldova (-8%), Russia (-8%), Azerbaijan (-7%), Norway (-7%), Latvia (-6%) and Estonia (-5%).

CSTO Secretary General expresses concern over Azerbaijani ceasefire violation at Armenia border

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 14:16, 1 April, 2020

YEREVAN, APRIL 1, ARMENPRESS. CSTO Secretary General Stanislav Zas has expressed concern over the ceasefire violation that took place on March 30th at the Armenia-Azerbaijan border which resulted in two Armenian soldiers and one civilian – a 14-year-old child – being wounded.

Zas told ARMENPRESS the fact that this incident is taking place when the international community is unitedly combating the coronavirus pandemic is perplexing.

ARMENPRESS: Days ago, as a result of the Azerbaijani ceasefire violation at the border with Armenia two Armenian servicemen and one 14-year-old resident of the Voskevan village were wounded. As CSTO Secretary General, how would you comment on this type of a provocation against a CSTO member country?

Zas: I’ve been informed by the Armenian side about the incident that took place at the Armenia-Azerbaijan border. The fact that this has resulted in two servicemen and the [14-year-old] resident of Voskevan being wounded is very concerning. At the same time, I would like to express concern regarding this kind of an incident in the CSTO zone of responsibility – at the border of a member country of the organization.

It is perplexing that the escalation is happening at a time when the international community is waging a united battle against the coronavirus pandemic. In this regard I am calling on the parties to the conflict to heed to the UN Secretary General’s calls on a global ceasefire. By the way, as far as I know Armenia has officially endorsed this call. I would also like to underscore the importance of the implementation of the agreements reached by the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan in terms of ceasefire in the conflict zone, and I wish the victims of the incident speedy recovery.

On March 30, the Azerbaijani military attempted a subversive incursion in the direction of Armenian positions in the Noyemberyan region of Tavush province. The adversary attack was thwarted, but the Azerbaijani troops also opened fire at civilian settlements, wounding a child.

 

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




COVID-19 cases in Armenia keep doubling every seven days

Public Radio of Armenia
April 5 2020

12-year-old Armenian boy commits suicide, criminal case instituted

News.am,  Armenia
April 3 2020

22:47, 03.04.2020
                  

On April 2, 2020 at 11:15, Vardenis Hospital filed a report to the police station in Vardenis stating that, the same day, a minor resident (born in 2007) of Sotk village of Gegharkunik Province of Armenia was found hanging from a bale thread near the entrance to the cattle farm adjacent to the family’s villa.

The Investigative Committee of Armenia told Armenian News-NEWS.am that the Vardenis Investigation Division of the Regional Investigation Department of the Investigative Committee of Armenia in Gegharkunik Province has instituted a criminal case under part 1 of Article 110 of the Criminal Code of Armenia (causing somebody to commit suicide).

Several expert examinations have been designated, other investigative and procedural actions are being performed to establish all the circumstances of the case.

Preliminary investigation is underway.

Armenpress: Armenian healthcare minister, Lord Ara Darzi, Noubar Afeyan participated in online panel on COVID19

Armenian healthcare minister, Lord Ara Darzi, Noubar Afeyan participated in online panel on COVID19

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 17:37,

YEREVAN, MARCH 28, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Healthcare Minister Arsen Torosyan, Aurora Humanitarian Initiative Co-Founder Noubar Afeyan, and IDeA Foundation Co-founder, Aurora Humanitarian Initiative and UWC Dilijan International School Co-founder Ruben Vardanyan, Lord Ara Darzi, Director of the Institute of Global Health Innovation at Imperial College, London, McKinsey & Company executive Andre Andonian and Dr. David Nabarro participated in an online conference today titled “COVID-19: Challenging General Fear”.

During the online webinar the participants shared views on the current situation around the globe and also in Armenia caused by the spread of the novel coronavirus.

In his remarks Dr. David Nabarro said in order to be protected from coronavirus it’s necessary to understand what kind of a disease it is. In terms of fighting the virus he made comparisons with other pandemics faced by humanity.

Thereafter, Healthcare Minister Arsen Torosyan introduced the panelists on the COVID-19 situation in Armenia and the country’s fight against the disease.

“In the fight against coronavirus we isolate patients and urge citizens to self-quarantine if they had contacted infected people. We also isolate those citizens who are coming from the risky countries. At this moment the number of these countries is nearly 20”, the minister said.

Noubar Afeyan informed that the vaccine created by his company is currently at the stage of clinical testing. He expressed hope that the results will be ready in spring.

McKinsey & Company executive Andre Andonian commented on the topic from the perspective of economic impact. He said there are several scenarios in terms of the COVID-19 economic impact, from the best to the worst. Mr. Andonian said coronavirus will have the greatest impact on the US economy after the Second World War.

In late December 2019, Chinese authorities notified the World Health Organization (WHO) about an outbreak of a previously unknown pneumonia in the city of Wuhan, central China. WHO declared the outbreak of the novel coronavirus a global pandemic and named the virus COVID-19. Cases of coronavirus have been reported in over 195 countries.

In Armenia, the total number of confirmed cases is 372 according to the latest data. 28 patients have recovered. One death case has been registered on March 26.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




Police charges 1889 people in Armenia with violating self-quarantine rules

Panorama, Armenia

As of March 28, 1889 people in Armenia have  been pressed with administrative charges for violating self-quarantine rules imposed to contain the coronavirus, according to figures from the Deputy Chief of Police Hayk Mhryan. 

As the Police official told at a press conference on Saturday, in 1843 instances people have been told to get off cars as third persons, with measures applied against two means of public transport.

In 48 cases drivers were pressed administrative charges for transporting more than two passengers. 
As Mhryan detailed the administrative charges were filed against citizens for having no passport or movement forms with them.  The amount of the charge is set out by the law. “If I am not mistaken the amount is now 100,000 AMD (200 USD),” said the deputy chief of Police.

To remind, The Commandant Office introduced strict restrictions of the pulic movement on March 24 for a duration of one week, requiring citizens to go out only if strictly necessary, such as for work, health-related reasons or grocery shopping.

TUMO shuts down centers in Paris and Beirut amid coronavirus pandemic

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 19:54,

YEREVAN, MARCH 13, ARMENPRESS. TUMO Center for Creative Technologies is shutting down its two international centers in Paris and Beirut due to the novel coronavirus pandemic, TUMO spokesperson Zaruhi Budaghyan told ARMENPRESS a day after she announced the shutdown of their educational institutions in Armenia and Artsakh.

More than 1000 students attend the TUMO center in the French capital, while around 300 are enrolled at the TUMO Beirut in Lebanon.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan